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Query: UMLS:C0021843 (bowel obstruction)
9,927 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We evaluated 224 consecutive patients referred for severe constipation prospectively by strict criteria to determine their candidacy for subtotal colectomy. Eighteen patients had insufficient symptoms to warrant evaluation. Two hundred six patients had anorectal manometry and defecography, and 182 had colonic transit measurement. Forty-nine patients had normal or minimally abnormal studies. One-hundred twenty-nine patients had abnormalities such as outlet obstruction, mild colonic inertia, diffuse gut dysfunction, or combinations of factors not favoring subtotal colectomy. Twenty-eight patients had colonic inertia without outlet obstruction and with disabling symptoms; 19 of these patients underwent subtotal colectomy. Follow-up > or = 12 months was available in 14 patients from this group. Of these patients, 12 (86%) were clinically improved. Preoperative evaluation accurately predicted postoperative fecal incontinence and likely reduced postoperative constipation. Small-bowel obstruction occurred postoperatively in 4 patients (29%), and remains a major risk of subtotal colectomy even in carefully selected candidates.
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PMID:Selection of constipated patients as subtotal colectomy candidates. 147 60

A case of warfarin-induced intramural hematoma and hemorrhagic infarction of the small intestine is described, and the literature on this adverse effect is reviewed. A 32-year-old white woman who had been receiving warfarin and carbamazepine came to a clinic complaining of lower back and stomach pain. She had a history of iliofemoral deep venous thromboses and seizures. A pelvic sonogram showed a large quantity of fluid present. Her prothrombin time (PT) was 29.2 sec. Her hemoglobin concentration and hematocrit were within the normal ranges. The patient was admitted to the hospital when her back pain increased and she vomited. The warfarin was discontinued. On day 5 the patient was still having abdominal pain and nausea. Her hemoglobin concentration and hematocrit had fallen to 6.6 g/dL and 20%, although her PT had decreased to 12.5 sec. On the same day, the patient underwent an exploratory laparotomy, and an indurated and ischemic area of jejunum was found and resected. The pathology report indicated the presence of hemorrhage and infarction consistent with an anticoagulant-related disorder. About 100 cases of intramural hematoma of the small intestine induced by anticoagulant therapy have been reported. Most patients are white males about 60 years of age. The sites most frequently involved are the duodenum and proximal jejunum. Symptoms include constipation, nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain. Laboratory test and radiological findings are fairly nonspecific, but when found together in a patient receiving an anticoagulant, the diagnosis can be made with some confidence. Management may be complicated by the bleeding disorder, the intestinal obstruction if present, and the original indication for warfarin therapy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Warfarin-induced intramural hematoma of the small intestine. 161 15

Colorectal strictures, either benign or malignant, are not uncommon in ulcerative colitis. Fifty nine of 1156 ulcerative colitis patients (5%) admitted to this hospital between 1959 and 1983 developed 70 separate colorectal strictures. Seventeen of the 70 strictures (24%) proved to be malignant and the other 53 benign. Nine patients developed more than one stricture. Three principal features distinguished the 17 malignant from the 53 benign strictures in this series: (1) appearance late in the course of ulcerative colitis (61% probability of malignancy in strictures that develop after 20 years of disease v 0% probability in those occurring before 10 years); (2) location proximal to the splenic flexure (86% probability of malignancy v 47% in sigmoid, 10% in rectum, and 0% in splenic flexure and descending colon); and (3) symptomatic large bowel obstruction (100% probability of malignancy v only 14% in the absence of obstruction or constipation). Moreover, cancer associated with strictures tends to be more advanced (76% stage D, 24% A and B) than that which does not produce strictures (18% stage D, 59% A and B).
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PMID:Benign and malignant colorectal strictures in ulcerative colitis. 164 33

The outcome in 40 patients who underwent colectomy for idiopathic megacolon and megarectum over an 18 year period was evaluated. All patients had a radiologically dilated bowel and a bowel frequency of less than two per week. Twenty two patients had a caecorectal anastomosis, 11 had an ileorectal anastomosis (including one with a previous caecorectal anastomosis and four with a previous sigmoid resection), and seven had a sigmoid resection. The mean (range) age at operation was 35 (17-69) years. All three operations resulted in a normal bowel frequency in more than 80% of patients but no patient with an ileorectal anastomosis experienced recurrent constipation. Thirty four patients experienced pain preoperatively and this was still present in 14 patients postoperatively. One patient died and four required subsequent laparotomy for bowel obstruction. The functional outcome in patients with dilatation of the whole colon and in those with dilatation of the left colon did not differ. Subsequent surgery for constipation was performed in three patients. Colectomy offers good results with few complications in the treatment of idiopathic megacolon, and an ileorectal anastomosis is the preferred operation.
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PMID:Colectomy for idiopathic megarectum and megacolon. 177 63

Hirschsprung's disease is the most frequent cause of large intestinal obstruction in the neonatal period, during which the majority of cases are diagnosed. In about 5 of cases diagnosis is not established until adolescence. We present a 12-year-old boy with Hirschsprung's disease, treated since childhood for constipation. Early diagnosis avoids complications.
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PMID:[Diagnosis and treatment of Hirschsprung's disease in adolescence]. 187 68

Patients with chronic constipation may have one of several physiologic disorders, not all of which are amenable to operative therapy. The aim of this study was to test colonic and pelvic floor function preoperatively, to identify patients suitable for surgery based on these studies, and to determine operative outcome over time. Between 1987 and January 1991, 277 patients referred for severe symptoms of chronic intractable constipation underwent colon transit studies, measurement of anal canal pressures and reflexes, and measurements of anorectal angle movements and efficiency of evacuation. Balloon expulsion studies, electromyography of the pelvic floor, and defecating proctograms also were done. Based on these studies, patients were categorized as having: slow transit constipation (STC), 29 patients; pelvic floor dysfunction (PFD), 37 patients; STC + PFD, combined slow transit and pelvic floor dysfunction, 14 patients; and irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), 197 patients. Slow transit constipation patients underwent abdominal colectomy and reanastomosis. Pelvic floor dysfunction patients underwent pelvic floor retraining only. Patients with STC + PFD underwent pelvic floor retraining followed by abdominal colectomy. Irritable bowel syndrome patients were treated symptomatically. Among the 38 patients operated on (STC and STC + PFD), there was no operative mortality. Prolonged ileus developed in 13%, and small bowel obstruction occurred in 11% of patients. On follow-up, a mean of 20 months after ileorectostomy, no patient was constipated, none required a laxative, and none was incontinent. The mean number of stools per day was four. The authors concluded that a prospective evaluation of colonic and pelvic floor function reliably delineated constipated patients with slow transit, suitable for operative management, from those with pure pelvic floor dysfunction or irritable bowel syndrome, who were not. Abdominal colectomy and ileorectostomy in the slow transit patients was safe and effective, resulting in prompt and prolonged relief of constipation.
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PMID:Evaluation and surgical treatment of severe chronic constipation. 195 96

Results of the surgical treatment for conservative intractable constipation in 70 adult patients are reviewed. 49 patients with severe symptoms have been treated by partial colectomy as sigmoid colectomy (n = 23) or left hemicolectomy (n = 26). 33 patients underwent colectomy with cecorectal anastomosis (n = 25) or ileorectal anastomosis (n = 8). Out of these patients with colectomy seven had undergone previous segmental colonic resection or internal sphincterotomy. Of those patients with cecorectal anastomosis who were dissatisfied, three underwent ileorectal anastomosis. Overall, a mortality rate of 3.3% and morbidity rate of 22.5 resp. 54.5% for partial and total colectomy were observed. The most frequent occurring complication after colectomy was small bowel obstruction in 30% requiring laparotomy in 40%. Of 45 patients who underwent partial colectomy, 34 (75%) had normal bowel function or were markedly improved. In 28 of 32 patients (87.5%) treated by colectomy a successful result has been achieved. The operation of sigmoid colectomy or left hemicolectomy may be recommended as a treatment for constipation only in patients with less severe symptoms or patients with recurrent sigmoid volvulus. For those patients with severe constipation, at present, colectomy with ileorectal anastomosis seems to be the surgical procedure that offers the greatest probability of improvement. However, the significant morbidity claimed the need for a careful patient selection.
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PMID:[Surgical therapy of chronic constipation]. 204 16

Thirteen infants and children with trisomy 21 have been treated for Hirschsprung's disease since 1975. Clinical presentation of Hirschsprung's disease included constipation (five); neonatal intestinal obstruction (four); enterocolitis (three); and meconium plug syndrome (one). Additional associated congenital anomalies occurred in 10 patients, of which complex cardiac disease accounted for 25% of the defects. Seven children underwent definitive operation: Duhamel pull-through (four); Soave pull-through (two); and anal myectomy (one). Satisfactory continence occurred in all but one child. Enterocolitis developed in seven patients (54%): two at diagnosis of Hirschsprung's disease; three after colostomy; and two after pull-through. Five children died (38%): one from enterocolitis, two from cardiorespiratory failure after recovery from enterocolitis, and two from end-stage cardiac disease. Children with trisomy 21 can safely undergo definitive operation for Hirschsprung's disease but are at high risk for developing enterocolitis and complications of associated cardiac disease.
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PMID:Management of Hirschsprung's disease in children with trisomy 21. 213 33

During a 17 year period 55 patients with abdominal wall defects were treated. A questionnaire concerning late surgical problems was distributed to the parents of the 47 surviving children and 44 (94%) answers were received. The mean follow up time was 5.4 years. There was no mention of remaining problems regarding 16 of the 28 omphalocoele patients and 10 of the 16 gastroschisis patients. Postoperative abdominal wall hernia was reported in 7 cases with omphalocoele and in 6 with gastroschisis; postoperative intestinal stoma occurred in 1 child with omphalocoele associated with anal atresia, and in 1 with gastroschisis and postoperative intestinal obstruction in 4 cases with omphalocoele and in 1 with gastroschisis. The other complaints related to abdominal pain, cryptorchidism, constipation and difficulties with care of the intestinal stoma. No difference in results was found between the two types of closure of the abdominal wall defects irrespective of the primary treatment. All the remaining problems could be corrected and the long term results in both conditions were good.
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PMID:Late surgical problems in children born with abdominal wall defects. 214 63

Two neonates with intestinal obstruction and two children (aged 1 and 4 years) with severe constipation since birth are reported in whom stenosis of the distal rectum was found. In association with the rectal anomaly, three of them had a presacral tumour (teratoma in two, hamartoma in one) and all had a deformed sacrum. An embryological hypothesis to explain this association has been postulated by Currarino, after whom this triad has been named. Two patients were related (father and daughter). The role of hereditary factors in the occurrence of the syndrome has been reported before. Operative treatment of the rectal stenosis was necessary in all patients. Preoperative diverting colostomy was performed in three cases, followed by a posterior sagittal approach to excise the rectal stenosis and the presacral mass. In one case, persistent cerebrospinal fluid leakage required re-exploration for closure of a tear in a congenitally abnormal dural sac. The fourth patient had undergone a low anterior resection in the past via the abdominal route and needed rectal dilatation afterwards for some time. The final result in all patients appears satisfactory, although follow-up is short. Most cases of this triad have been reported in children but a number of patients have been diagnosed only as adults. Recognition of this triad should imply a careful search for neural crest malformations. Operative treatment to correct all soft tissue anomalies leads to good results.
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PMID:Triad of anorectal stenosis, sacral anomaly and presacral mass: a remediable cause of severe constipation. 230 97


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